Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
Bestia
975Pearl PointsHard to book. Usually worth it.

About Bestia
Bestia is the Arts District Italian that has held its ground in Los Angeles since 2012, earning consecutive Michelin Plates and a Pearl Recommended nod for 2025. The kitchen runs on wood-fired cooking, house-made charcuterie, and handmade pasta. Booking is hard — allow four to six weeks minimum — but for a first-time LA visitor after serious Italian, it is the right call at $$$$.
Should You Book Bestia?
Getting a table at Bestia is genuinely difficult, and that has been true since the day it opened in 2012. The Arts District Italian has held its spot on the Los Angeles restaurant shortlist for over a decade, earned consecutive Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025, and climbed from #152 to #33 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America rankings between those same years — a meaningful jump that reflects a restaurant still moving, not coasting. If you are visiting LA for the first time and want one Italian dinner that covers wood-fired cooking, house-made charcuterie, and handmade pasta under one roof, Bestia is the right call. The effort to book it is real, but it is worth it.
What to Expect as a First-Timer
Bestia operates out of a converted warehouse on E 7th Place in the Arts District, and the setting does the work before the food arrives. The room is large, loud, and industrial in the way that Los Angeles warehouse dining tends to be — high ceilings, open kitchen energy, the smell of wood smoke from the grill. This is not a quiet dinner. If you want a contemplative meal with conversation, plan to arrive early and request accordingly; by 8 PM the room is at full noise. The kitchen's identity is built on balance: the flavor profile leans toward intensity , cured meats, char, fermented depth , without tipping into excess. Wood-fired cooking is the structural backbone, and house-made charcuterie and pasta are the two categories where the kitchen consistently demonstrates its range.
For a first visit, orient around those two categories. The pasta and charcuterie programs are what distinguish Bestia from comparable Italian spots in LA. Osteria Mozza is the obvious peer comparison , both are serious Italian restaurants at the leading of the LA market , but Bestia's cooking reads more rustic and fire-driven, where Mozza leans toward refinement and the crudo side of Italian. Angelini Osteria is another benchmark, smaller and more intimate, with a more traditional Roman sensibility. Bestia sits in a different register: more ambitious in scope, more warehouse-scale in execution. Newer entrants like Antico Nuovo and Bianca are worth knowing, but neither carries the same depth of track record. Bottega Louie is a different animal entirely , more casual, more crowd-pleasing, not a direct substitute if you are after serious Italian cooking.
The Brunch and Lunch Question
Bestia does not currently list weekend brunch or lunch hours in its database record. The kitchen operates dinner service only, running 5–11 PM seven days a week. If a morning or afternoon format is a priority for your visit, this is not the venue. For a first-timer specifically, the dinner window is where the full kitchen program runs , wood-fired grill, charcuterie, the full pasta selection , so evening service is where the case for Bestia is strongest anyway. Check the venue directly for any updates to weekend service formats, since this is the kind of thing that shifts seasonally without wide notice.
Ratings and Recognition
Bestia holds a 4.6 Google rating across 3,772 reviews , a high score at volume, which is harder to sustain than a high score at low count. The Michelin Plate recognises consistent quality without star elevation; think of it as a reliable signal that the kitchen is doing its job well without necessarily aiming for the ceremonial end of the spectrum. The OAD climb from #152 in 2025's overall list to #33 in 2024 casual North America rankings reflects a restaurant that has tightened rather than slipped over time. Pearl Recommended status for 2025 aligns with that read. Internationally, if you want a reference point for Italian cooking operating at the serious end , not the same format, but a comparable commitment to craft , 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong and cenci in Kyoto represent what the category looks like when it reaches its ceiling in other markets.
Practical Details
Reservations: Book as far out as the reservation window allows , four to six weeks is a reasonable minimum for a preferred time slot, and weekend evenings will go faster than that. Walk-ins exist but should not be relied on for a first visit. Hours: Monday through Sunday, 5–11 PM. Dinner only. Price: $$$$ , plan for a full dinner with drinks to run at the higher end of that tier. Dress: Smart casual is the practical standard; the warehouse setting means the room skews casual, but the price point and crowd tend toward put-together rather than relaxed. Location: 2121 E 7th Place, Arts District, Los Angeles. Street parking and rideshare are both workable; the neighbourhood has changed significantly since 2012 and the immediate block is well-trafficked at dinner.
How It Compares in Los Angeles
Within the $$$$ Los Angeles dinner bracket, Bestia sits in a distinct lane. For comparison: Kato is the more technically precise option if a modern tasting format appeals , it operates as a counter-format Taiwanese-inflected tasting menu, harder to book and more ceremonial in pace. Hayato is the right call if Japanese kaiseki is on the table, and it operates at a higher level of formality and cost. Vespertine is for diners who want a full conceptual experience , progressive, performance-adjacent, not comparable to Bestia's register at all. Camphor offers a French-Asian alternative that is currently easier to book and worth knowing if Bestia availability falls through. Gwen is the better pick if fire-cooked meat is the specific draw and you want a steakhouse format. Bestia's advantage over all of them for a first-time LA visitor is range: the charcuterie, pasta, and wood-fire programs give you more ground to cover in a single meal than most single-focus competitors.
For broader LA planning, see our Los Angeles hotels guide, our Los Angeles bars guide, our Los Angeles wineries guide, and our Los Angeles experiences guide. If you are cross-referencing serious Italian elsewhere in the US, Le Bernardin in New York represents the French fine-dining benchmark for comparison, while Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Alinea in Chicago show what ambitious American tasting menus look like at the leading of their respective markets. For Napa and Northern California, The French Laundry and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg are the relevant reference points. Emeril's in New Orleans anchors the Southern end of that US comparison set.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Bestia?
Four to six weeks is a reasonable minimum, and Friday or Saturday dinner slots go faster than that. Bestia has been difficult to book since it opened in 2012, and that difficulty has not eased. Check the reservation platform at exactly the moment the booking window opens for your target date, and treat any slot before 7 PM as a fallback, not a preference.
Is Bestia worth the price?
At $$$$, Bestia earns its price point if wood-fired Italian cooking and house-made charcuterie and pasta are what you are after. It holds a Michelin Plate (2025), ranked #152 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list, and carries a 4.6 Google rating across nearly 4,000 reviews — a difficult score to sustain at that volume. If you want more technical precision for a similar spend, Kato is the stronger case; if you want a looser, convivial Italian dinner, Bestia delivers.
What should a first-timer know about Bestia?
The restaurant operates out of a converted warehouse at 2121 E 7th Place in the Arts District, and the room is large and loud — this is not a quiet dinner. The menu is built around house-made pasta, charcuterie, and wood-fired cooking from chef Ori Menashe and pastry chef Genevieve Gergis, who opened it in 2012. Come hungry, order broadly across the menu rather than concentrating on one course, and book a car rather than expecting easy street parking.
What should I wear to Bestia?
There is no documented dress code. The converted warehouse setting, Arts District location, and the crowd Bestia draws all point toward dressed-up casual — clean, considered clothes rather than formal attire. You will not be underdressed in jeans and a good shirt, and you will not be overdressed in a blazer.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Bestia?
Bestia's menu format is not documented in the current venue record, so specific tasting menu details can change here. What is documented is that the kitchen's strengths are house-made pasta, charcuterie, and wood-fired cooking — formats that reward ordering several dishes rather than a single fixed progression. If a structured tasting menu is your preferred format, Vespertine or Hayato are purpose-built for it; Bestia's reputation is built on its à la carte range. Check the venue's official channels for the latest details.
Is lunch or dinner better at Bestia?
Dinner only. Bestia runs a single service, 5–11 PM every day of the week, with no lunch or brunch hours listed. There is no decision to make between services — if you want to eat at Bestia, it is a dinner booking.
Can Bestia accommodate groups?
The large warehouse space means Bestia handles groups better than most $$$$ LA restaurants, but large-party reservations at high-demand venues require direct coordination. Private dining availability is not documented in the current record. Groups of six or more should contact the restaurant well in advance rather than booking through the standard reservation flow, and should expect that peak weekend slots will be harder to secure than early-week evenings.
Location
2121 E 7th Pl, Los Angeles, CA 90021
Los Angeles, United States
Compare Bestia
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bestia | Italian | $$$$ | Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #152 (2025); Michelin Plate (2025); Bestia is an Italian restaurant in the Arts District of Los Angeles, known for its powerful, yet balanced flavors, wood-fired cooking, and house-made charcuterie and pasta. Opened in 2012 by Chef Ori Menashe and Genevieve Gergis in a converted warehouse, it offers an unparalleled dining experience with a thoughtfully sourced and seasonal menu.; Pearl Recommended Restaurant (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #33 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024); Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #31 (2023); Opinionated About Dining Gourmet Casual Dining in North America Ranked #40 (2023); Bestia is a highly-regarded Italian restaurant in the Arts District of Los Angeles, known for its rustic, industrial-chic setting and wood-fired cooking. The menu, created by Chef Ori Menashe, features Italian classics with an emphasis on powerful, balanced flavors, including excellent house-made pizzas and charcuterie. It is a popular spot for a lively and celebratory dining experience. | Hard | — |
| Kato | New Taiwanese, Asian | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Hayato | Japanese | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Vespertine | Progressive, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Camphor | French-Asian, French | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Gwen | New American, Steakhouse | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Kato — New Taiwanese, Asian, $$$$
- Hayato — Japanese, $$$$
- Vespertine — Progressive, Contemporary, $$$$
- Camphor — French-Asian, French, $$$$
- Gwen — New American, Steakhouse, $$$$
Within the $$$$ bracket in Los Angeles, Bestia occupies a specific position: it is the most approachable entry point into serious, fire-driven Italian cooking, with a track record that none of its direct Italian peers in the city currently match at volume. Kato is the better choice if you want a precise, counter-format tasting experience — it operates at a higher level of technical finesse, but it is a different format entirely and harder to book. If Italian cuisine is the specific draw, Bestia's depth of program across charcuterie, pasta, and wood-fire puts it ahead of its direct LA Italian peers.
Hayato and Vespertine are not direct competitors — Hayato is kaiseki at a higher price and formality level, and Vespertine is a conceptual experience that operates in a different register altogether. Neither is a substitute for Bestia if Italian cooking is what you are after. Camphor is worth knowing as an alternative if Bestia availability fails: it is currently easier to book, the French-Asian format is sharply executed, and it sits in the same price tier. Not the same cuisine, but a comparable level of seriousness. Gwen is the right call if fire-cooked meat is the specific priority and you want a steakhouse format with real craft behind it.
The practical verdict: book Bestia first for a first-time LA visit if Italian and a lively room are the goal. If it is unavailable, Camphor is the best same-price fallback. If you are willing to shift cuisine and format, Kato is the most technically accomplished meal in Los Angeles right now at this price point.
Hours
- Monday
- 5–11 pm
- Tuesday
- 5–11 pm
- Wednesday
- 5–11 pm
- Thursday
- 5–11 pm
- Friday
- 5–11 pm
- Saturday
- 5–11 pm
- Sunday
- 5–11 pm
Recognized By
Explore Los Angeles
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